The promise of community and equality is at the center of our
most prized national document, yet we're shaped by harsh forces to see
difference and to base judgment on it . . .
I realized that, finally, this is why the current perception
of educational need is so limited: it substitutes terror for awe. But it
is not terror that fosters learning, it is hope, everyday heroics, the
power of the common play of the human mind.
Mike Rose, Lives on The Boundary
I suppose there are
as many definitions of being educated as there are educated people. To
some, an educated person is one who doesn't make mistakes. To others, he
is one who remembers all the details. To me, she is someone who is always
asking herself questions and seeking answers and who considers the questions
more important than the answers. The person who never makes mistakes and
the person who remembers all the details may both be unprepared for our
rapidly changing world. Perhaps they will learn from the person who asks
questions, perhaps they will fight improvements they cannot understand,
but only the third person will create improvements. The need for the third
type of person exists at all levels of our society. Only such a repairman,
for instance, can diagnose, take apart, and repair a machine he has never
seen before. Therefore, it is to the advantage of society to educate students
to be thoughtful and reflective. Yet very often the local school system
stifles the imaginative and inquisitive student because of an overconcern
for correctness. Mike Rose lived a life on the boundary because his early
schooling stuck to the fundamentals and did not develop his abilities.
When he began teaching, he found students with less preparation and greater
difficulties than he had, and he was motivated to find strategies to help
them. I have a similar story: my schooling in the 50's and 60's, mostly
in Alabama, was a disaster, and I have tried to help students who received
even less help than I did. As a guide to helping them, all I have had is
an understanding of my own heavy-handed education.
As a student, I
had three easily ameliorable problems: I was an introvert, I was hyperactive,
and I was left-handed. An ideal school would have recognized these problems
and have helped me develop ways to compensate for them. And in fact, my
schools gave aptitude tests from time to time, and my teachers reported
my behavior every six weeks for twelve years. However, with rare exception,
instead of helping me discover myself, my schools from grade one through
college simply punished me for my failings and ignored my abilities. Of
course, I was not the only student so punished; there were many of us struggling
on the boundary, but since I was not much aware of their problems at the
time, let me illustrate how the schools dealt with mine.
Being an introvert
is not what extroverts think it is. I am not shy; I am not selfish; I do
not spend most of my time contemplating my navel; I thoroughly enjoy being
with other people. A simple analogy will explain: an introvert is like
a laptop computer; that is, he doesn't always have to be plugged into a
power source at all times but can run off of his own batteries. Only an
introvert would be happy exploring and mapping a deep cave alone, as I
have done. (Most introverts pretend that they are "normal" and find excuses
for spending time alone.) The down side of being an introvert is that I
sometimes without intention irritate other people because I don't feel
a constant unconscious pull to conform. More than once I have had a friend
angry at me because she "had to ask." As an adult, I have learned to "fit
in" and to expect rejection from time to time anyway, but as a child in
the school environment, being "different" was a terrible burden. The "popular"
students wouldn't play with me and the bullies found me an easy target.
If the teachers found out that I had been attacked, they would be angry
with me and interrogate me as to why I "couldn't get along with the other
children."
Grade school should
have been a good opportunity for me to learn to relate with others. As
a child I was both insecure and affectionate, wanting love and afraid that
I didn't deserve it. The classroom was a place where, under adult supervision,
I should have had an opportunity to learn to understand myself, to learn
to control my impulses and fears, to learn to recognize the needs of others,
and to gain a sense of my role in society. Yet while my grade school teachers
paid great attention to my dress, decorum, punctuality, and obedience,
they usually ignored my need for social growth and interaction. Indeed,
most of my interaction with other students was clandestine, in notes or
whispers to avoid the teacher's paddle. Even before school or between classes
or while outside at recess or PE, the other outcasts and I huddled together
and kept our voices down to avoid drawing attention to ourselves, as if
we were in a prison. Grade school not only discouraged interaction but
also actively attacked my social confidence through the use of public humiliation
as part of the discipline process. Until high school, paddlings in front
of the class were a regular threat for such crimes as talking to another
student, defending my point of view (talking back), or not paying attention.
That I was generally quiet and well-behaved made little difference; indeed,
sometimes whole classes were lined up in the halls to await physical abuse.
However, verbal psychological abuse and humiliation hurt worse. School
was a place where our worse fears about ourselves would be publicly expressed
as fact. In a junior college last year, I overheard a teacher (who mistakenly
thought her students were late for class) publicly dredge up as punishment
the nightmarish experiences and beliefs of inadequacies that she had wrung
out of her students in private confessionals, and I burned remembering
how I had felt as a child under similar circumstances. The worst treatment
which I received may sound trivial to an extrovert, but it invaded my soul:
my teachers treated me as a somewhat unacceptable label or number and not
as an individual. Of all of the students in the class, I was the most likely
to want to talk to the teacher during class break. But I discovered, time
after time, that the teacher did not want to talk to me except to correct
me.
The social isolation
and even humiliation did not end in grade school, but continued to a lesser
degree all the way through graduate school. In high school, college, and
graduate school, I still seldom had an opportunity to speak to other students
in class. I can remember only one teacher (in high school!) who normally
accepted student-student exchanges. Although a number of teachers encouraged
us to ask them questions, more did not, and some tried to ignore our presence.
When one of my college professors tried to teach a graduate level audiovisual
course by letting the students demonstrate the use of the machines, he
was reprimanded in a note stating, "The college believes in a teacher-centered
class." We were isolated in our work as well. Even in my college creative
writing class, I did not see the other students' papers; the professor
read his selections aloud with his criticisms instead. (No student in any
school ever showed me a paper after class; we were always ashamed after
we got them back.) In addition to isolating us, many teachers enjoyed tormenting
us also. One professor enjoyed mispronouncing unusual names (for instance,
pronouncing Fred's name "Feed rish Vill hem" as if he were German) or giving
students humiliating nicknames or deliberately misinterpreting our answers
to questions in class. Another of my professors discussed in class, at
length and on several occasions, the alcoholic problems of the husband
of one of the students in the room. Many teachers enjoyed asking trick
questions and then mocking the students who answered incorrectly. One time
in graduate school, I stepped into the trap but answered the question correctly;
however, the professor was too busy gloating in front of the class to recognize
that my regional pronunciation of the word was different from his, and
so I had to accept the scorn I hadn't earned. (One rule we learned to accept
was that the teacher was always right, even when wrong.)
My second problem
in school was that I was mildly hyperactive; my son is now taking medication,
but I never have. I don't see hyperactivity as being entirely a weakness:
as a child, I had enormous energy and enthusiasm; as a young adult, I began
taking long distance bicycle trips. That energy could have been channeled
and utilized in school; I was always eager to learn. For instance, I was
interested in writing as early as the fifth grade but did not get an opportunity
until the eleventh grade. In addition, I read at 650 words a minute and
could have been rapidly educating myself. Yet in the deadly tedium of the
classroom, while the teacher droned away while reading out of a text I
had covered in minutes, I had to invent games or create imaginary empires
just to keep sitting there. During my high school years when the dread
of public humiliation was lessened, I would read ten books a week--in class.
My chemistry teacher would say, "Look up, Kifer, this is important." But
it never was; I learned only from his books. Fortunately my college classes
were more interesting; but they could have been much better. The teachers
tended to tell me what I already knew, and the professors would read old
notes. If the notes and lectures had been mimeographed or photocopied and
given to us ahead of time, we could have had discussions of the material
instead.
My final problem
in school was that I was left-handed. Left-handedness involves some minor
physical adaptations and some major mental adaptations. Besides needing
a left-handed desk, which I never got, I also needed a left-handed education.
Research has shown that frequently lefthanders have unequal abilities in
the two brain hemispheres. The aptitude tests made while I was in school
reveal such a disparity, and comments made by my teachers establish that
they were well aware of this problem, although not the cause (my seventh
grade teacher, for instance, told my parents that I knew science better
than she did; I just couldn't do the work). Although the problems of lefthanders
may vary, my basic difficulty was that my verbal and intellectual abilities
were well above average while my motor and clerical abilities were below.
In order for me to perform as well as the other students, I needed more
time to put my words on paper (my hand would ache; often I could not finish),
but more important, I needed to understand my mistakes and to develop compensating
tactics. This was not the school's plan. The method used by my teachers
up to high school was that of endless repetition of mindless work. Every
year, I took English, history, and math, and every year, I made clerical
mistakes or failed to remember trivia or used my own solutions and, as
a result, was sent home with dismal report cards. My mother would rage,
"What are we ever going to do with you?" and I would go to my bed to cry
hot tears. For all the time and trouble spent, no one taught me phonetics,
punctuation, or proofreading, and no one allowed me time to go over my
work. Until the eleventh grade, the smart half of my mind was irrelevant
in the classroom. Then, when understanding became more important than repetition,
my grades shot up. But my education changed more in degree than in kind.
The teachers still expected a repetition of data; the information was just
more abstract. And they still punished me for my clerical abilities without
explaining the rules. For instance, I failed the college competency examination
in English for three comma mistakes even though the chairman said I had
written the best paper (no one had taught punctuation rules there either).
I also made "B's" in English courses because I was not allowed to use a
dictionary on tests.
The greatest failure
of my schools, including graduate school, was the lack of an intellectual
approach to learning. My classmates and I were constantly harassed about
mistakes and were constantly required to remember facts, but we were never
taught to question or to think for ourselves. When the teachers asked us
questions, they expected to hear what they had said or what the book said.
The only opposing viewpoints we encountered were fossils from the past,
used as paper tigers. Even when asked for our opinions, only a fool would
disagree with the professor; I know because I was such a fool. In only
a few classes were we asked on tests to compare or to analyze. Composition
classes were my only real opportunity to express myself, but the topics
were usually dull and did not allow much flexibility: "Should College Football
Be Eliminated" was one of them. And when my tests and essays were returned,
they usually would have only mechanical mistakes marked and contain no
explanation for my grade (usually a "B"). Asking for more information to
improve my results only produced vague answers, such as, "You didn't say
what I wanted you to say." For a short time, my college hired a literature
teacher who, unlike the others, talked about ideas in an open-ended fashion,
but who otherwise patronized us like the rest. I once walked to his home
on a Saturday, hoping to have an opportunity to freely discuss literature.
He was sympathetic and shared his lunch, but said, "No one ever talks about
these things; you just work on your own."
To be blunt, I
feel that my official education was almost entirely a waste of time. I
did not learn how to interact, how to control my moods, how to spell and
punctuate, or how to engage in critical thinking in class. I did not even
learn my facts there. The thin trickle of information from class was deluged
by my independent reading. What I really learned in class was to sit quietly
and not complain. If I had been like the other students, I would have learned
not to question also. The net effect of my schooling was to give me a poor
self-image, to make me nonassertive in dealing with others, and to give
anyone who looked at my transcripts the belief that I was not a very capable
fellow. The internal effect on me was devastating: I had turned in what
I considered to be first-rate work year after year and received only "B's"
without explanation: I fought a continuous battle between believing that
I was of little value or that the system was of little value.
Like Byron, I could
. . .look on the desert peopled past
As a place of agony and strife
Where for some secret sin, to sorrow I was cast.
The "secret sin"
is no exaggeration; no teacher, professor, or counselor ever explained
either to me or to my parents why my grades were not better than what they
were. Until the eleventh grade, my only "B" was in reading in the second
grade, "C's" were the rule, "D's" common, and "F's" not rare, yet my ACT
scores in the eleventh grade were 23 English, 24 Math, 29 Social Studies,
and 29 Science. My undergraduate school was "one that took in students
well below the national average and graduated them even further below"
(quoting an education professor) even though only a quarter of them managed
to finish. I earned less than a "B" overall and not much more than a "B"
in English, yet when I took the GRE examination while there, I earned a
580 (79th percentile) verbal score, a 580 (84th percentile) quantitative
score, and a 660 (85th percentile) advanced score in English. I might have
been an underachiever in grade school, where my self-esteem was rock bottom,
but the same can not be said about college where I started with a positive
attitude and worked hard at all my courses. In particular, I was deeply
interested in literature, frequently won praise for my writing ability
(although not from my professors), read widely, had an excellent memory
of what I had read or what was said in the class, could quote from almost
any poem and knew the shorter ones by heart, could take anything that I
studied and analyze it to a great depth using either a narrow or a broad
interpretation.
One explanation
for my not doing better is that my teachers were conspiring against me.
It is and was a paranoia inducing idea, and therefore, I fought against
it. But it is the correct and only explanation; except, it was not personal;
it was standard operating procedure with all save half a dozen of the teachers
that I had; it was the way the school treated all of us. As Emerson said,
"Society is involved in a conspiracy against the manhood of every one of
its members." (A few years ago, my old high school counselor told me why
my grades had not been better: "You were always too stubborn." Thank God
that I was!) Because of this conspiracy and not laziness on the part of
the teachers, we were never given adequate opportunities to prove our capabilities.
Never more than three exams in a college class. No extra time to finish.
No explanation for a poor grade. No allowance for inadvertent errors except
those made by the teacher. No opportunity to rewrite. No opportunity to
learn from mistakes. No provision for growth.
Since I attended
six different schools in two states and my grades were similar in all of
them, I cannot fault any particular school. My son has had the same difficulties
in school, so I can't even fault a time period (in a progressive private
high school, he wrote a 14-page, brilliant autobiographical account, with
some flaws, to get circled spelling mistakes, the comment "interesting,
well-written but short," and the grade of "B"). Nor was the problem my
teachers. They were almost all bright, well-informed, caring people who
wanted to do a good job. The problem was the educational philosophy that
they represented, a philosophy that saw teaching as being the elimination
of error rather than the opening of possibility, the fulfillment of tasks
rather than the fulfillment of dreams, the assimilation of old knowledge
rather than the creation of new. The plan from kindergarten through college
was to instill terror in the student, a "quiet desperation," rather than
to enable him to "march to his own drummer." But I began to perceive through
my readings a different kind of education. Since the old plan put so much
emphasis on being "right" and on the performance skills best mastered by
the right side of the brain which a lefthander has difficulties with, I
will whimsically call the opposite approach a "left-handed education."
In this second approach, the emphasis is no longer on memorizing bits of
information that have to be absorbed verbatim; the emphasis is instead
on gaining insight and holistic understanding. A right-handed education
demands, like Procrustes (who matched his guests to his bed by either stretching
or sawing off their legs), that all students have the same abilities, performance,
and opinions, but a left-handed education accepts their differences and
helps them achieve as individuals. A right-handed education zealously hunts
for error, even registration error, and stigmatizes the student accordingly
while a left-handed education looks for growth, sees error as an essential
part of the learning process, and allows the student to make up poor work
or to drop a class without penalty. The purpose of a right-handed education
is to categorize students and to teach them facts within a very narrow
field; the purpose of a left-handed education is to enable students, to
teach them not facts but procedures, to help them develop a global understanding
of the world, and to encourage them to look into themselves as well.
I did not learn
about a left-handed education only from books; I also learned from my students.
When I began teaching English in 1968, I wanted to prove that I could be
a first-rate teacher in spite of my second-rate grades. As a result, I
imitated my hardest literature teacher and outdid my toughest writing teacher
although, of course, I emphasized the kind of learning that had been easiest
for me and used the literature that I enjoyed the most. I gave tests in
which I expected the students to know the material word for word. I loved
hearing me talk and giving challenging assignments. My students did not
feel the same way. They would shuffle into class, sit morosely, and fail
their exams. One day a student spoke out in class, and instead of stifling
criticism, I encouraged further remarks and carried the comments into my
other classes as well. We had some good discussions. I told the students
that my intention had not been to punish them but to prepare them. I discovered,
in spite of my beliefs to the contrary, that they did not object to doing
hard work. What they were objecting to was doing work that was boring and
meaningless to them--the same problem I had had in college. Their comments
cut me to the bone and changed me as a teacher forever. Somehow, in spite
of my experiences, I had visualized the good teacher as having enormous
insight into the material, as being thoroughly prepared to lecture, and
as getting back from the students exactly what he had given them. Now I
saw that my real job was much more difficult: I needed to understand my
students' needs more than I needed to understand the material, I needed
to be prepared to learn more than I needed to be prepared to teach, and
I didn't need for the students to regurgitate what I had taught them; I
needed to help them gain insights of their own. I began a process of trial
and error teaching, with the cooperation and consensus of the students,
that has lasted until now. While I keep looking for ways to be more effective,
it is part and parcel of a left-handed education that no method is right:
each group of students and each student require a different approach; as
a result, the quest will last the rest of my life.
One of my expectations
when I began teaching was that my classroom would be full of ideas. I felt
if I got the students thinking for themselves that they would acquire more
control over their own lives and a greater understanding of the material
they were learning as well. However, I quickly discovered that thoughtful
discussion is hard to obtain. Oh yes, everyone had an opinion on abortion.
But no one had actually taken time to examine the issue or was sympathetic
to the opposing point of view. Many considered trying to understand the
other side as being more than a little wrong--especially when dealing with
abortion. At first, I tended to think of my students as being a little
stupid. I gradually realized that unlike me they hadn't been reading ten
books a week during class, and that what they knew was what they were taught.
And their schools had probably been similar to my own. I eventually developed
a very indirect approach to critical thinking. I arranged my courses to
proceed from the most concrete writing to the most abstract. Instead of
expecting students to automatically engage in critical thinking, I "taught"
it as a writing skill, just as I "taught" spelling, grammar, punctuation,
expression, organization, observation, test taking, letter writing, paraphrasing,
summarizing, and comparing. I found that it was very important for me to
highlight each of these skills, to explain goals, procedures, and techniques
briefly, but that the students needed to work out their own solutions.
I tried to make their work gradually more difficult: they first had to
describe, then narrate, then illustrate, then categorize, then compare,
and finally argue. But I instituted more basic changes as well. First,
I made friends with my students and treated them with respect. (One said,
"You're different from any teacher I've ever had.") Second, I encouraged
comments and questions at any time. Third, I let the students talk to each
other and help each other in class. Fourth, I used the students' work as
examples, good and bad, so they would know they weren't alone, and I let
them do the criticizing. Fifth, I did not work against the students but
worked with them to help them get as high a grade as possible and produce
as high a quality of work as possible. I told them, "I want all of you
to make 'A's,' but I can only give you what you earn." Sixth, I marked
all of the errors on their papers, but emphasized cognitive rather than
mechanical skills as their goals and graded their papers accordingly. Seventh,
I worked with the students as individuals, both on their papers and in
private sessions, because each had different difficulties and abilities,
and I let them know that I valued their individuality. And eighth, from
the first day of class to the last, I stressed the growth and potential
of the human mind.
The $64,000 question
is--did the extra effort work? The answer is both yes and no. I am not
a perfect teacher, and I have not had a storybook success; I rarely felt
that the lame were walking and the blind could see. But I always accomplished
as much as a conventional teacher would have and usually more. The biggest
payoff for me was to walk into friendly, cheerful classroom knowing that
I was helping other people get through college rather than creating for
them the same kind of hell that I went through. In addition, I was not
just giving them grades based on their abilities, but I was seeing real
improvement in nearly every student's work. I discovered each time I taught
a course that the students' work showed greater improvement, indicating
that, unlike the book, I was adapting to the needs of my students. The
most dramatic example of this was in my work with international students.
When I first attempted to teach them poetry, not a single student produced
an adequate paper on the essay exam; some just copied the poems. Yet after
I taught the course several times, every student had an adequate paper,
many were good, and several were excellent.
I am very proud
that I was able to help some students who had never done well before. There
was Mousa, who wanted to express his outrage over the treatment of his
people in Palestine, but whose term paper draft was childish, disorganized,
and unsupported. He was hurt by my comments saying, "Don't you believe
the Palestinian people have rights too?" I told him that it didn't matter
what I believed, that he had to "prove" every point he made. He kept bringing
the paper to me, and I kept making suggestions, and he earned an "A+" for
his results. There was Marleen, a 40-year-old cotton mill worker who cussed
me out after I returned her first paper in 101 with a "U" and told me that
I was just like all of her other teachers who hadn't given her a chance.
I calmly told her that profanity did not make a good impression and asked
her to explain her problems. When she finished, I told her that I would
meet with her after class or at any other time to help her, but that I
would only give her the grade she earned. Her attitude changed and, with
little help, she made a "B" in my class and an "A" in 102, taught by someone
else. Interestingly, she gave me the credit for the "A." Craig was a student
who sprawled over several desks, who harassed girls in class, who constantly
introduced red herrings into discussions, and who could not complete a
sentence or continue a thought in his writing. He denied he had any problems
at all and expected "A's" on all his work. Craig only passed the basic
writing course because I endless let him resubmit all his papers, but he
began changing his behavior and made a solid "C" in 101, including some
"B" papers and one "A." Carol was a pretty girl with a poor self-image,
who scored third lowest on an "IQ" test given by another teacher. Her compositions
were very poor, and I wondered if I could help her. Yet by the end of one
semester of basic writing, she used effective organization, demonstrated
clear thinking, and had almost eliminated mechanical mistakes in her papers.
My final conclusion was that her only problem was a poor education.
My experience in
helping students with writing has led me to believe that almost anyone
can learn to write effectively. Of course, some of us have larger vocabularies,
greater knowledge, greater experience, or better ideas than others, but
most writing is not dependent on these. For most kinds of writing, there
are only three problems that have to be dealt with. The first is the stylistic
problem of how to best express what to say to the audience. The second
is the nitty-gritty problem of hard mental work. The third, and greatest
problem, is the psychological problem created by having been harshly judged,
even humiliated in the past. Giving the students a lot of writing opportunities
in a critical and supportive environment usually produces lots of progress,
but not all "A" and "B" students. Sometimes even a hard-working student
can't make it. I always remind myself that poor writing skills, a low ACT
score, or a low IQ test result do not mean an unintelligent person; Albert
Einstein couldn't pass math, I've heard. This student, who is struggling
in English, may be doing well elsewhere: Chiemi, who came to see me only
because she had to get a recommendation from her English teacher to transfer,
had a 3.84 average overall! But even if the student is failing all classes
and has no special abilities, she is still a human being who deserves sympathy
and respect.
Some educators
would call my efforts "spoon-feeding" or say they require too much work
from the teacher. But I never did any of the students' work for them; I
only marked papers, explained problems and methods, and encouraged. I would
have thought that the students would complain because I gave them more
work than any other teacher and still expected high quality, but most of
them saw the work as an opportunity to express themselves and to learn,
and I only received complaints sometimes about my topics. I admit that
I gave myself additional work, but it was pleasant and interesting work,
not drudgery, and often very rewarding.
My experience both
as a student and as a teacher has taught me the same message that Mike
Rose's experience taught him: "It is not terror that fosters learning,
it is hope, everyday heroics, the power of the common play of the human
mind." In other words, don't pound home the basics and leave the students
too afraid to look you in the eye, but love them and encourage them (fill
them with courage) and give them a left-handed education.